4 Denio 520 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1847
Under the charter, the expenses of opening and regulating streets are not made a charge upon the whole village, but only upon the owners and occupants of the houses and lots to be benefited by the improvement. The corporation is the agent or instrument of the landholders having an interest in the matter, to ascertain how much one man ought to pay, and another to receive ; to collect the money from those who are benefited, and see that it is properly applied to the particular object. (Stat. 1827, p. 276, §§ 21 to 25.) No legal duty rests upon the corporation beyond that of setting the proper machinery in motion, and making a right application of the funds when they are received. (McCullough v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 23 Wend. 458.) The warrants, as originally issued, were drawn in pursuance of the authority and duty of the trustees, and made payable out of the funds for
This case is not like Kelley v. The Mayor of Brooklyn, (4 Hill, 263,) to which we aro referred. These warrants are sealed instruments, and cannot, therefore, be deemed bills of exchange: and besides, they are not payable absolutely,'but only out of a particular fund, which never had any existence, They contain no words of contract; and I do not see how it is possible to maintain debt, or any other action upon them. They may, perhaps, be used as evidence in some other suit or proceeding; but not as the foundation of an action.
The largest warrant on which the plaintiffs seek to recover, if it were not a sealed instrument, might, perhaps, be regarded as a bill of exchange. (Kelley v. The Mayor of Brooklyn, supra.) But as it is not a bill, and contains no words of contract, I do not see how it can be used as a substantive cause of action. The plaintiffs might possibly use it as evidence in support of the money counts, or an account stated. But even then, we could not fail to-see that it contains words—“ and charge the same to the account of Union Avenue”—which point to the real nature of the transaction ; and when the whole truth
Whether the plaintiffs have a remedy by mandamus, an action on the case against the trustees for neglect of duty, or can maintain counts against the corporation for work and labor, are questions which do not arise on this bill of exceptions. (See McCullough v. The Mayor of Brooklyn, 23 Wend. 458; Cuyler v. The Trustees of Rochester, 12 Wend. 165.) It is enough for the present to say, that this verdict cannot stand.
New trial granted.